Forwarding Data Path Optimization in a Distributed Environment for Achieving Micro-Mobility

ABSTRACT

A method and apparatus of updating a forwarding plane of a network element in response to receiving a mobility event is described. The network element receives a mobility message indicating a mobile node has coupled to a new access port associated with the network element. The message further indicates that the mobile node moved from an old access port to a new access port. The network element adds an entry in a forwarding table of the old egress engine to redirect a set of packets destined to the mobile node to a new egress engine, where the new egress engine is associated with the new access port. Furthermore, the network element redirects the set of packet from the old egress engine to the new egress engine.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/975,486filed Oct. 19, 2007, which is hereby incorporated by reference.

FIELD

Embodiments of the invention relate to the field of computer networking;and more specifically, to optimizing forwarding data paths supportingmobile nodes.

BACKGROUND

A mobile network is one that supports users with mobile nodes stayingconnected to the mobile network as the users move their mobile nodes todifferent points along the mobile network. FIG. 1 illustrates oneembodiment of a mobile network 100. While in one embodiment, mobilenetwork 100 supports a Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access(WiMAX), in alternate embodiments, mobile network 100 supports the sameand/or different wireless and wired access technologies known in the art(802.11, Ethernet, optical fiber, copper, Digital Subscriber Line (DSL),Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM), etc.). In FIG. 1, mobile nodes 102A-Bcouple to base station systems (BSS) 104A-B over an air interface knownin the art (WiMAX, 802.11a/b/g/n, etc.). BSS 104A-B couple to foreignagent/access services network gateway (FA/ASN-GW) 106. In oneembodiment, BSS 104A-B couple to FA/ASN-GW 106 through a layer 2 orlayer 3 network. FA/ASN-GW 106 further couples to home agent/coreservices network (HA/CSN) 108, which couples to Internet/Core Network110. In an alternative embodiment, BSS 104A-B can couple to HA-CSN 108in addition and/or in lieu of coupling to FA/ASN-GW 106 (not shown).

Typically, a mobile node registers with the mobile network 100 in orderto use this network. In one embodiment, mobile nodes 102A-B registerwith FA/ASN-GW 106 through a protocol known in the art that providesmobile connectivity (Mobile-Internet Protocol (Mobile-IP), etc.). In oneembodiment, mobile node 102A-B sends a registration request (RRQ) toFA/ASN-GW 106, which forwards this request to HA/CSN 108. HA/CSN 108responds with a registration reply which FA/ASN-GW 106 forwards to themobile node. Receiving the reply completes the registration process.FA/ASN-GW 106 installs a route towards the mobile node with access portinformation. The access port (not shown) is the link on which the RRQarrived. The ingress engine installs the route installed in therespective forwarding information base (FIB) with a key representing themobile node on the egress line card. The egress engine has an egress keyon the access port that represents information on how to reach themobile node. While in one embodiment, the key is a lookup handle that isused to lookup in a table, in alternate embodiment the key can be someother way to identify information of a mobile node stored in the ingressand/or egress engines. While in one embodiment the information in theegress key is layer-2 information, in alternate embodiments theinformation is the same and/or different (layer-3 information, tunnelinformation, line-card slot information, encapsulation information,etc.).

In one embodiment, mobiles node 102A-B can change BSS 104A-B becausemobile nodes 102A-B are mobile and do not typically get access to corenetwork 110 through the same BSS 104A-B. Two types of mobility eventscan be defined within mobile network 100. Macro-mobility (not shown) iswhen mobile node 102A-B moves between BSS 104A-B coupled to differentFA/ASN-GW 106. Micro-mobility occurs when a mobile node 102A-B movesbetween different BSS 104A-B within the domain of a single FA/ASN-GW106. In one embodiment, a micro-mobility event occurs when mobile node102A changes coupling from BSS 104A to BSS 104B.

Mobility events are dispatched by the forwarding plane of FA/ASN-GW 106to the FA/ASN-GW 106 control plane. This control plane reprograms theforwarding plane so that data traffic destined for the mobile nodecausing the mobility event is appropriately forwarded by the forwardingplane of FA/ASN-GW 106. However, interactions between the control planeand forwarding plane of FA/ASN-GW 106 can introduce considerable delayto the response time for the mobility event, such as multiple levels ofinterprocess communications, latency in the kernels managing theforwarding and control planes, cleanup of the forwarding state, timetake to program the forwarding plane, etc. Furthermore, higher rates ofmobility events can causes a higher strain on system resources becauseof the factors mentioned above. Delays in mobility event response canlead to disruption of data traffic forwarding to and/or from mobilenodes 102A-B.

SUMMARY

A method and apparatus of updating a forwarding plane of a networkelement in response to receiving a mobility event is described. Thenetwork element receives a mobility message indicating a mobile node hascoupled to a new access port associated with the network element. Themessage further indicates that the mobile node moved from an old accessport to a new access port. The network element adds an entry in aforwarding table of the old egress engine to redirect a set of packetsdestined to the mobile node to a new egress engine, where the new egressengine is associated with the new access port. Furthermore, the networkelement redirects the set of packet from the old egress engine to thenew egress engine.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Embodiments of the invention may be best understood by referring to thefollowing description and accompanying drawings which illustrate suchembodiments. The numbering scheme for the Figures included herein issuch that the leading number for a given element in a Figure isassociated with the number of the Figure. However, element numbers arethe same for those elements that are the same across different Figures.In the drawings:

FIG. 1 (Prior Art) illustrates one embodiment of network that supportsmobility.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a FA/ASN-GW handling amicro-mobility event according to one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 3 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method for handlingmicro-mobility events according to one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 is an exemplary flow diagram for preparing to receive a mobilityevent according to one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 is an exemplary flow diagram for receiving a mobility eventaccording to one embodiment of the system.

FIG. 6 is an exemplary flow diagram for updating the egress linkinformation according to one embodiment of the system.

FIG. 7 is an exemplary flow diagram for processing packets destined formobile node by the old egress engine according to one embodiment of thesystem.

FIG. 8 is an exemplary flow diagram for processing packets destined formobile node by the new egress engine according to one embodiment of thesystem.

FIG. 9 is a block diagram illustrating an exemplary network element thathandles mobility events according to one embodiment of the system.

FIG. 10 is a block diagram illustrating an exemplary line card thathandles mobility events according to one embodiment of the system.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following description, numerous specific details such as networkelement, line card, mobility event, ingress/egress engine, packet,mobile node, controller card, and interrelationships of systemcomponents are set forth in order to provide a more thoroughunderstanding of the invention. It will be appreciated, however, by oneskilled in the art that the invention may be practiced without suchspecific details. In other instances, control structures, gate levelcircuits and full software instruction sequences have not been shown indetail in order not to obscure the invention. Those of ordinary skill inthe art, with the included descriptions, will be able to implementappropriate functionality without undue experimentation.

References in the specification to “one embodiment”, “an embodiment”,“an example embodiment”, etc., indicate that the embodiment describedmay include a particular feature, structure, or characteristic, butevery embodiment may not necessarily include the particular feature,structure, or characteristic. Moreover, such phrases are not necessarilyreferring to the same embodiment. Further, when a particular feature,structure, or characteristic is described in connection with anembodiment, it is submitted that it is within the knowledge of oneskilled in the art to affect such feature, structure, or characteristicin connection with other embodiments whether or not explicitlydescribed.

In the following description and claims, the term “coupled,” along withits derivatives, is used. “Coupled” may mean that two or more elementsare in direct physical or electrical contact. However, “coupled” mayalso mean that two or more elements are not in direct contact with eachother, but yet still co-operate or interact with each other. Exemplaryembodiments of the invention will now be described with reference toFIGS. 2-10. In particular, the operations of the flow diagrams in FIGS.2 and 4-8 will be described with reference to the exemplary embodimentsof FIGS. 3 and 9-10. However, it should be understood that theoperations of these flow diagrams can be performed by embodiments of theinvention other than those discussed with reference to FIGS. 3 and 9-10and that the embodiments discussed with reference to FIGS. 3 and 9-10can perform operations different than those discussed with reference tothese flow diagrams.

A method and apparatus for optimizing a forwarding data path in adistributed environment for achieving micro-mobility is described.According to one embodiment of the invention, a network element receivesa mobility message that indicates a mobile node has changed accessports. The ingress engine associated with the new access port receivesthe message and sends a forwarding message to the egress engineassociated with the old access port. The forwarding message indicatesthe packets destined for the mobile node be redirected to the new egressengine associated with the new access port. The old egress enginemodifies its forwarding table to redirect packets destined for themobile node to the new egress engine. The new egress engine forwardsthose packets to the mobile node via the new access port.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200handling a micro-mobility event according to one embodiment of theinvention. In one embodiment, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 is theforwarding plane of FA/ASN-GW 106. In FIG. 2, FA/ASN-GW 200 comprisesingress engines 202A-C and egress engines 204A-C. While in oneembodiment, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 comprises the three ingressand egress engines, in alternate embodiments, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane200 can comprises the same, more, less, and/or different numbers ofingress and egress engines. Furthermore, while in one embodiment, theingress and egress engines are separate packet processors, in alternateembodiments, the ingress and egress engines can be the same packetprocessor.

In addition, egress engines 204A-B couple to BSS 104A-B with links214A-B via access ports 212A-B, respectively. While in one embodiment,links 214A-B is a layer-2 link, such as Ethernet, etc., in alternateembodiments, links 214A-B can be different types of links known in theart (layer-3, wireless, optical, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM),Synchronous Optical Network (SONET), etc.). BSS 104A-B couple to mobilenode 206A over an air interface (WiMAX, 802.11a/b/g/n, etc.).

While mobile node A is in position 206A, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200forwards packets to mobile node A with egress engine 204A through accessport 212A via link 214A and BSS 104A. Ingress engines 202A-C processpackets destined for mobile node A by forwarding the packets to egressengine 204A. For example and by way of illustration, ingress engines202A-C forwards packets for mobile node A using paths 208A-C,respectively.

Because mobile node A can access the network from different BSS, mobilenode A couples to potentially several different BSS. For example and byway of illustration, mobile node A couples to BSS 104A at position 206A(shown in phantom) and moves to position 206B, where mobile node Acouples to BSS 104B. The coupling of mobile node A to BSS 104B triggersa mobility event. FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 handles the mobilityevent by reprogramming forwarding path between the egress engines. Inone embodiment, egress engine 204A forwards packets destined for mobilenode A in position 206B to egress engine 204B. Egress engine 204Bforwards these packets to mobile node A in position 206B through accessport 212B. In another embodiment, egress engine 204A forwards packetsdestined for mobile node A in position 206B to egress engine 204Bthrough intervening ingress engines (not shown). For example and by wayof illustration, this embodiment can occur when there is not a directbackplane connection between egress engines 204A-B.

In this embodiment, this path change to the forwarding plane enables theappropriate forwarding of the packets destined mobile node A when thisnode has changed accessing of the network from BSS 104A and access port212A to BSS 104B and access port 212B. Furthermore, this change setups atransient forwarding state that correctly forwards traffic until thecontrol plane of FA/ASN-GW 106 reprograms FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane200. In another embodiment, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 adds one ormore forwarding paths between egress engines to handle one or moremicro-mobility events involving one or more mobile nodes. While in oneembodiment, access ports 212A-B are physical ports, in alternateembodiments, access ports 212A-B can be virtual ports or a mixture ofphysical and virtual ports.

By updating the state of the egress engine for a micro-mobility, lesschange to FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 is done. This allows FA/ASN-GW106 to redirect traffic to the mobile node quickly with less disruptionto traffic forwarding for the mobile node than by reprogramming theentire forwarding plane.

FIG. 3 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method 300 for handlingmicro-mobility events according to one embodiment of the invention. Byway of illustration, FIG. 3 is described in reference to FIG. 2. In FIG.3, at block 302, method 300 enables micro-mobility in the networkelement. In one embodiment, method 300 enables micro-mobility inFA/ASN-GW 106 by handling micro-mobility events in the forwarding planeof FA/ASN-GW 200. Enabling handling of micro-mobility events is furtherdescribed in FIG. 4, below.

At block 304, method 300 detects movement of the mobile node to adifferent BSS. In one embodiment, mobile node signals to the new BSSthat the mobile node wishes to access the network through this BSS.

At block 306, method 300 receives message from the new BSS indicatingthat the mobile node moved to a new access port. In one embodiment,FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 receives a message at the new ingressengine from the new BSS indicating the mobile node is requesting thatthe new BSS and access port be used as access to the network for thatmobile node. For example and by way of illustration, ingress engine 204Areceives a request from mobile node A in position 206B that this nodewants to access the network through BSS 104B and access port 212B.Receiving messages from BSS is further described in FIG. 5 below. Inanother embodiment, FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 determines that themobile node has moved by receipt of move message on access port 212B ofFA/ASN-GW 106.

Method 300 receives a message to send traffic destined for the movedmobile mode to a new egress engine, at block 308. In one embodiment,method 300 receives a message that indicates the new egress engineassociated with the mobile node's new position should handle trafficdestined for that mobile node. For example and by way of illustration,egress engine 204A receives a message from ingress engine 202B thategress engine 204A should redirect packets destined for the mobile nodeA in position 206B to egress engine 204B. In one embodiment, mobile nodeis identified by key EK-O sent in the message from ingress engine 202Bto egress engine 204A.

At block 310, method 300 updates egress link information to handle themoved mobile node. In one embodiment, method 300 adds a forwarding rulein the forwarding table of the old egress engine to forward packetsdestined for the moved mobile node to the new egress engine. Asdescribed above, adding the additional path appropriately forwards thetraffic destined for the mobile node without reprogramming the all theegress and/or ingress engines in the forwarding plane. For example andby way of illustration, egress engine 204A updates its forwarding tablesto indicate that packets destined for mobile node A in position 206B areto be sent to egress engine 204B. Updating egress link information isfurther described in FIG. 6 below.

Method 300 processes the packets destined for the moved mobile node atblock 312. In one embodiment, method 300 receives packets destined forthe mobile node at an ingress engine. The ingress engine determineswhich egress engine is associated with the mobile node. Because thecontrol plane has not reconfigured the forwarding plane based on themobility event associated with the moved mobile node, the ingress engineforward the packet to the old egress engine. Using the updated linkinformation as described in block 310 above, the old egress engineredirects the packets to the new egress engine. The new egress engineforwards the packet to newly associated BSS for forwarding to the mobilenode. Packet processing for the mobile node is further described inFIGS. 7-8 below.

At block 314, method 300 updates the forwarding plane so as to forwardpackets destined for the mobile node to the new egress engine. In oneembodiment, the control plane of FA/ASN-GW 106 reprograms the FA/ASN-GW200 forwarding plane 200 such that ingress engines 202A-C forward suchpackets to the new egress engine associated with the mobile node. Inanother embodiment, method 300 removes the transient forwardinginformation stored in the old egress engine. For example and by way ofillustration, FA/ASN-GW 106 control plane reprograms FA/ASN-GW 200 byupdating the forwarding tables associated with ingress 202A-C and egress204A-C engines to reflect that mobile node A has moved to position 206B.

FIG. 4 is an exemplary flow diagram of method 300 preparing to receive amobility event according to one embodiment of the invention. Inparticular, FIG. 4 represents a further description of block 302. InFIG. 4, at block 402, method 300 enables mobility handling in thenetwork element for access port AP. In one embodiment, method 300enables mobility handling by FA/ASN-GW 106 control plane sending acontrol message to FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 200 indicating one ofaccess ports 212A-B should be treated as an access port for mobilenodes.

At block 404, method 300 creates a special egress key EK-S for accessport AP. In one embodiment, egress key EK-S indicates the egressencapsulation process for sending packets through access port AP. Whilein one embodiment, the EK-S indicates a layer-2 encapsulation, inalternate embodiments, EK-S indicates another encapsulation known in theart (layer-3, etc.) While in one embodiment, egress key EK-S comprisesaccess port specific information and lacks mobile node specificinformation, in alternate embodiments, egress key contains otherinformation (slot and access port information, etc.) Method 300 waitsfor packets destined for the mobile node from the old egress engine atblock 406.

FIG. 5 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method 300 for receiving amobility event according to one embodiment of the invention. Inparticular, FIG. 5 represents a further description of block 306. InFIG. 5, at block 502, method 300 receives mobility event information atthe ingress engine associated with the new access port coupled to themobile node. In one embodiment, method 300 receives a Logical LinkControl—eXchange Identification (LLC-XID) packet indicating that amobile node has moved from one base station to another. An LLC-XIDpacket is an Ethernet layer-2 packet used to indicate a change inwireless access point. The base station system that gets the airinterface handoff detects the micro-mobility event and sends an LLC-XIDwith the source Media Access Control (MAC) address of the mobile node.For example and by way of illustration, ingress engine 202B receives anLLC-XID packet via access port 212B from BSS 104B in response to mobilenode A moving to position 206B. In alternate embodiment, method 300receives a different type of packet indicating a mobile node has changedin base station systems.

At block 504, method 300 identifies the mobile node associated with themobility event. In one embodiment, method 300 identifies the mobile nodeby the source MAC address associated with the received LLC-XID packet.

Method 300 locates the old key EK-O and old access port AP 212Aassociated with the mobile node at block 506. In one embodiment, method300 locates EK-O and old access port AP 212A through a lookup of for themobile identification by source MAC address. At block 508, method 300sends information about the old key EK-O and new egress key EK-S to oldegress engine. In one embodiment, EK-O comprises encapsulationinformation for transmitting packets out old access port AP 212A. Whilein one embodiment, EK-O is a lookup handle that references a datastructure on a lookup, in alternate embodiments EK-O may additionallyidentify the old access slot and port. Method 300 waits for the nextmobility event at block 510.

FIG. 6 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method 300 for updating theegress link information according to one embodiment of the invention. Inparticular, FIG. 6 represents a further description of block 310. InFIG. 6, at block 602, method 300 receives the mobility event informationfrom the new egress information. In one embodiment, method 300 receivesthe old key EK-O and new egress key EK-S sent by the new ingress engineas described in FIG. 5 at block 508. At block 604, method 300 uses theinformation associated with EK-O to locate a data structure associatedwith the mobile node. In one embodiment, method 300 locates the mobilenode data structure in the forwarding tables associated with the oldegress engine. For example and by way of illustration, egress engine204A looks up EK-O which egress engine 204A received in a message fromingress engine 202B. Method 300 updates this data structure withinformation associated with new special key EK-S so that the old egressengine redirects packets destined for the mobile node to the new egressengine. In this embodiment, the forwarding tables of the ingress engineare not modified, so the ingress engines continue to forward packetsdestined for the mobile node to the old egress engine. For example andby way of illustration, method 300 adds that forwarding path 210 fromold egress engine 204A to new egress engine 204B. The forwarding tablesof ingress engines 302A-C are not modified. Thus, in this example,packets destined for mobile node A in position 206B and received atingress engines 202A-C are sent on paths 208A-C, respectively, to egressengine 204A. Egress engine 204A redirects those packets using themodified forwarding tables to egress engine 204B. In this embodiment,the updates allows FA/ASN-GW forwarding plane 300 to properly forwardthe packets destined for the mobile node in the new position without acomplete reprogramming of the forwarding plane by the control plane.

FIG. 7 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method 300 for processingpackets destined for mobile node by the old egress engine according toone embodiment of the invention. In particular, FIG. 7 represents afurther description of block 312. In FIG. 7, at block 702, method 300receives packets destined for the mobile node at the old egress engine.In one embodiment, method 300 receives packets destined for the mobilenode from ingress engines that received these packets from HA/CSN 108 orthe Internet. For example and by way of illustration, egress engine 204Areceives packets destined for the mobile node from one or more ofingress engines 202A.

At block 704, method 300 determines if the packets should be sent to thenew access port associated with the mobile node. In one embodiment,method 300 determines if the packet should be sent to the new accessport by retrieving the data structure associated with the mobile node inthe forwarding tables of the processing egress engine. In thisembodiment, if the packet is to be sent to the new egress engine, thedata structure indicates that the packet is redirected to new accessport via the new egress engine. For example and by way of illustration,egress engine 204A determines this by looking up EK-O which is sent byingress engines 202A-C along the mobile node destined packets. Thislookup provides the data structure that indicates to redirect packets toaccess port 212B via egress engine 204B. The data structure includesmobile-subscriber specific information. If the packet is be sent throughthe old access port, method 300 processes the packet with the old keyEK-O at block 706. Control proceeds to block 714 below.

If the packet is to be sent out the new access port, method 300identifies the new egress engine. In one embodiment, method 300identifies the new egress engine using the special key EK-S. Method 300sends the packet to the new egress engine. In one embodiment, method 300sends the packet to the new ingress engine along with the special keyEK-S and mobile node specific information, such as encapsulationinformation, MAC addresses, quality of service parameters, egressfeature sets, etc. Method 300 processes the packet using the new key atblock 712. In one embodiment, method 300 processes the packet byencapsulating the packet using information associated with the specialkey EK-S and the mobile node specific information sent to the new egressengine. Processing of the packet is further described in FIG. 8 below.At block 714, method 300 waits for another mobile node destined packet.

FIG. 8 is an exemplary flow diagram of a method 300 for processingpackets destined for mobile node by the new egress engine according toone embodiment of the invention. In particular, FIG. 8 represents afurther description of block 712. In FIG. 8, at block 802, method 300receives mobile node destined packets from the old egress engine. Forexample and by way of illustration, method 300 receives packets destinedfor mobile node A in position 206B from egress engine 204A via path 310.Method 300 identifies egress packet encapsulation and information usingthe new key EK-S at block 804.

At block 806, method 300 forms the appropriate packet encapsulation andapplies the appropriate packet processing. While in one embodiment,method 300 forms a complete layer-2 packet encapsulation, in alternateembodiments, method 300 forms other packet encapsulation as is known inthe art (layer-3, etc.). In one embodiment, method 300 applies packetprocessing as is known in the art (applying quality of service policies,traffic shaping, traffic policing, applying access control policies,apply firewall policies, packet translation, etc.). For example and byway of illustration, egress engine 204B forms the packet encapsulationand packet processing of packets destined for mobile node A in position306B. Method 300 waits for the next egress event at block 810. WhileFIG. 8 has been described in reference to the new egress engineprocessing packets destined for the mobile node, in alternateembodiment, the old egress engine can apply the packet processing asdescribed in the FIG. 8.

FIG. 9 is a block diagram illustrating an exemplary network element 900that handles mobility events according to one embodiment of theinvention. In FIG. 9, backplane 906 couples to line cards 902A-N andcontroller cards 904A-B. While in one embodiment, controller cards904A-B control the processing of the traffic by line cards 902A-N, inalternate embodiments, controller cards 904A-B perform the same and/ordifferent functions (reprogram the line cards, upgrade software, handleoperator requests, collect statistics, etc.). Line cards 902A-N processand forward traffic according to the policies received from controllercards 904A-B. In one embodiment, line cards 902A-N handle mobilityevents as described in FIG. 2.

FIG. 10 is a block diagram illustrating an exemplary line card 1000 thathandles mobility events according to one embodiment of the invention. InFIG. 10, line card comprises ingress engine 1004 and egress engine 1006.While in one embodiment, ingress 1004 and egress 1006 engines havedifferent modules and are different engines, in alternate embodiments,these engines can have the same modules and/or be the same engine. Inone embodiment, ingress engine comprises update module 1008A, egresstable module 1010, ingress packet processor 1012, and mobility eventmodule 1016A. Egress comprises update module 1008B, link informationmodule 10014, mobility event module 1016B, and egress packet processormodule 1018.

Update modules 1008A-B updates forwarding table information for ingress1004 and egress 1006 engines, respectively. In one embodiment, updatemodule 1008A-B receives forwarding table updates to ingress 1004 andegress 1006 engines from the control plane and updates the respectiveengine forwarding tables as described in FIG. 3 at block 314 above.Egress table module 1010 receives messages to send traffic to the newegress engine as described in FIG. 3 at block 308. Ingress packetprocessor 1012 processes packets received by receiving line card andforwards these packets to the appropriate egress engine using theingress forwarding tables.

Link information module 1014 updates the link information of the egressengine 1006 as described in FIG. 3 at block 310. Ingress mobility eventmodule 1016A receives messages from the new base station systemindicating the mobile node has moved a new access port as described inFIG. 3 at block 306. Egress mobility event module 1016B receivesmobility event messages from the new ingress engine as described in FIG.3, block 308. Egress packet processing module processes packet destinedfor the mobile node as described in FIG. 3 at block 312.

This implementation of the handling mobility events is an example, andnot by way of limitation. Thus, network elements having otherarchitectural configurations can incorporate embodiments of theinvention. Examples of other network elements that could incorporateembodiments of the invention could have multiple line cards or have asingle line card incorporating the functionality of both the ingress andegress engines. Moreover, a network element having the mobility eventhandling and response functionality distributed across the traffic cardscould incorporate embodiments of the invention.

Controller cards 204A-B as well as line cards 202A-N included in thedifferent network elements include memories, processors and/orApplication Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs). Such memory includes amachine-readable medium on which is stored a set of instructions (i.e.,software) embodying any one, or all, of the methodologies describedherein. Software can reside, completely or at least partially, withinthis memory and/or within the processor and/or ASICs. For the purposesof this specification, the term “machine-readable medium” shall be takento include any mechanism that provides (i.e., stores and/or transmits)information in a form readable by a machine (e.g., a computer). Forexample, a machine-readable medium includes read only memory (ROM);random access memory (RAM); magnetic disk storage media; optical storagemedia; flash memory devices; electrical, optical, acoustical or otherform of propagated signals (e.g., carrier waves, infrared signals,digital signals, etc.); etc.

Alternative Embodiments

While this invention has been described in reference to FA/ASN-GW 106,this invention is applicable to HA/CSN 108. In one embodiment, HA/CSN108 implements method 300 to process micro-mobility changes from mobilesnodes accessing access ports coupled to HA/CSN 108.

For example, while the flow diagrams in the figures show a particularorder of operations performed by certain embodiments of the invention,it should be understood that such order is exemplary (e.g., alternativeembodiments may perform the operations in a different order, combinecertain operations, overlap certain operations, etc.).

While the invention has been described in terms of several embodiments,those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention is notlimited to the embodiments described, can be practiced with modificationand alteration within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. Thedescription is thus to be regarded as illustrative instead of limiting.

1. A computerized method, comprising: receiving a mobility message by anetwork element indicating a mobile node has coupled to a new accessport, wherein the mobility message further indicates that the mobilenode moved from an old access port to the new access port, and whereinthe network element comprises the old and new access port; adding anentry in a forwarding table associated with an old egress engine toredirect a set of packets destined to the mobile node to a new egressengine, wherein the new egress engine is associated with the new accessport; and forwarding the set of packets to the mobile node from the oldegress engine via the new egress engine.
 2. The computerized method ofclaim 1, further comprising: receiving the set of packets at one or moreingress engines; and forwarding the set of packets to the old egressengine from the one or more ingress engines.
 3. The computerized methodof claim 1, wherein the forwarding is based on a special egress keyassociated with the new egress engine, wherein the special egress keyindicates encapsulation and process information associated with the newaccess port.
 4. The computerized method of claim 3, further comprising:creating the special egress key based on information associated with thenew access port.
 5. The computerized method of claim 1, whereinreceiving the mobility message is received at a new ingress engineassociated with the new access port.
 6. The computerized method of claim5, further comprising: sending a forwarding message to the old egressengine, wherein the forwarding message indicates to forward the set ofpackets to the new egress engine.
 7. A network comprising: a mobilenode; and a network element comprising: a plurality of access ports, aset of one or more ingress engines, wherein one of the set of one ormore ingress engines receives a mobility message indicating the mobilenode has coupled to a new one of the plurality of access ports, whereinthe mobility message further indicates that the mobile node moved froman old one of the plurality of access ports to the new access port, anda plurality of egress engines, wherein one of the plurality of egressengines that is associated with the old one of the plurality of accessports adds an entry in a forwarding table to redirect a set of packetsdestined to the mobile node to the new one of the plurality of egressengines, wherein the new one of the plurality of egress engines isassociated with the new one of the plurality of access ports, andwherein the old one of the plurality of egress engines forwards the setof packets to the mobile node via the new one of the plurality of egressengines.
 8. The network of claim 7, wherein at least one of the set ofone or more ingress engines receives the set of packets and the at leastone of the set of one or more ingress engines forwards the set ofpackets to the old one of the plurality of egress engines.
 9. Thenetwork of claim 7, wherein the forwarding is based on a special egresskey associated with the new one of the plurality of egress engines,wherein the special egress key indicates encapsulation and processinformation associated with the new one of the plurality of the accessports.
 10. The network of claim 9, wherein the network element createsthe special egress key based on information associated with the new oneof the plurality of access ports.
 11. The network of claim 7, wherein anew one of the set of one or more of ingress engines associated with thenew one of the plurality of access ports receives the mobility message.12. The network of claim 11, wherein the new one of the set of one ormore of ingress engines sends a forwarding message to the old one of theplurality of egress engines, wherein the forwarding message indicates toredirect the set of packets to the new one of the plurality of egressengines.
 13. An apparatus comprising: means for receiving a mobilitymessage indicating a mobile node has coupled to a new access port,wherein the mobility message further indicates that the mobile nodemoved from an old access port to the new access port, and wherein thenetwork element comprises the old and new access port; means for addingan entry in a forwarding table associated with an old egress engine toredirect a set of packets destined to the mobile node to a new egressengine, wherein the new egress engine is associated with the new accessport; and means for forwarding the set of packets to the mobile nodefrom the old egress engine via the new egress engine.
 14. The apparatusof claim 13, further comprising: means for receiving the set of packetsat one or more ingress engines; and means for forwarding the set ofpackets to the old egress engine from the one or more ingress engines.